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Inspiring, nurturing and empowering young people with a vision impairment.

Celebrating 200 years of brilliant Braille!

The image is a close-up of a sheet of Braille. The bottom part of the image includes the text "Braille 200 @ NCW" with the NCW (New College Worcester) logo, which features an orange swoosh resembling an eye. It is quite a simple logo with the text colours only being off grey.
In 1824, Louis Braille, at just 15 years old, invented the Braille code—a tactile writing system designed to be read by touch. This ground-breaking development has enabled blind and partially sighted individuals to read, write and access information independently.
 
Skip forward 200 years and Braille is a universal system, available in every language and is used by over six million blind people worldwide. Despite advancements in technology, Braille remains as essential as ever.
 
The VI community and beyond is marking 200 years of Braille from September 2024 to August 2025, and here at NCW, we’re excited to be part of the celebrations!

Watch our amazing celebratory video! "Braille is..." written by Head of Braille Miss Potter - going live 6pm on 21/10!

A male student reading Braille
image of a sixth form student reading braille
image of a students hands reading printed braille
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Braille at NCW

Despite the many advances in talking technology, we believe that learning Braille is still one of the most important things many of our students can do in order to achieve further/higher education aspirations and to gain employment, since the skill of reading (rather than listening) is of the utmost importance in the world of work.

Students who use Braille come to us with a wide range of abilities – from beginners to regular users. Depending on their personal needs, we can offer a one-to-one, personalised teaching approach to give them the confidence and skills to make Braille an important “tool” in enabling them to be as independent and professional as possible.

The ability to read and write Braille fluently and accurately can be life changing for many of our students, opening up a new world of possibilities.

We currently follow the RNIB Fingerprint reading and writing  Course with extra reading or writing exercises where necessary. Its soap opera style lets students hone their Braille skills while enjoying or deriding the characters’ adventures. Initially students learn to write on a Perkins brailler, which is a manual machine producing hard copy braille.  However, we encourage students to use braille technology such as the Orbit 20 reader so that favourite or textbooks can be downloaded and read and notes written on a small and discreet piece of equipment.  This allows for reading and writing texts and emails from a phone or computer, reading and writing on the Orbit as a stand-alone piece of equipment or driving a computer using the braille keyboard.  Vistas are wide and possibilities endless with the pairing of braille and technology in this way.

Once students have got to grips with the literary braille code we can introduce other codes to them such as languages, Mathematics, Music, etc.

Please visit our dedicated webpage to explore all the exciting celebrations and events marking 200 years of brilliant Braille! From historical highlights to modern-day innovations, you won’t want to miss out on how this incredible system continues to empower the blind and partially sighted community worldwide. Stay up-to-date on everything we’re doing to honour this milestone and celebrate Braille’s lasting impact!

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